Protesters gathered Saturday at Boston Common as part of nation-wide rallies against the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

Thousands of marchers, moved by stories of children being separated from their families at the US-Mexico border, converged in Boston on Saturday to denounce President Trump’s immigration policies as draconian measures that violate human decency and compassion.

A rally and march in the city’s downtown brought families out in force as parents pushed children in strollers and carried babies amid a sea of signs evoking the dark images emerging from detention facilities on the country’s southern border.

“No more kids in cages,” read one sign. “Don’t jail children,” was written on another.

The protest was among hundreds staged across the country in the latest outpouring of resistance against Trump’s immigration agenda. The Boston event began with a rally on City Hall Plaza followed by a march to Boston Common, where protesters staged a second demonstration.

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It was organized by a coalition of civil rights and activist groups who support due process rights for detained immigrants and want to abolish family separations and detentions in the immigration system. Police Commissioner William B. Evans estimated about 5,000 demonstrators participated in the event, though organizers said the crowd exceeded 15,000.

No one was arrested, a Boston police spokesman said. The demonstration unfolded under intense heat, which affected some marchers, two of whom were taken to area hospitals for heat-related symptoms, according to Boston Emergency Medical Services Chief James Hooley. Six others were evaluated on City Hall Plaza, he said.

The marchers spoke out against using local police to enforce federal immigration law and criticized Trump’s ban on travel from several majority-Muslim countries, a policy that the US Supreme Court endorsed in a 5-4 decision issued Tuesday.

Sirley Silveira Paixao, a 30-year-old Brazilian immigrant, said she traveled to the US-Mexico border at the end of May with her 10-year-old son, Diego, to seek asylum. But US officials split them up, Silveria Paixao said, and sent the boy to Chicago, where he has been living for more than a month.

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“We came to the United States seeking help and we never imagined that this could happen,” said Silveria Paixao, who addressed protesters in Portuguese as an interpreter translated her comments into English. “I beg everyone: please release these children. Give my son back to me.”

Lydia Nakiberu, a Ugandan immigrant and leader with the Matahari Women Workers’ Center in Boston, said officials from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement descended on her house six years ago and arrested her husband, who is undocumented.

Nakiberu said her husband was detained in front of the couple’s two older children, who were traumatized. As a result of his arrest, Nakiberu said her husband, who she declined to name, missed the birth of their youngest son, Judah, who is 6 years old.

“Even though this happened years ago, my children still to this day are scared that at any moment ICE will come for their parents,” she said.

The latest outcry over Trump’s immigration tactics began with the implementation of a “zero tolerance” policy that required criminal prosecution for all adults caught crossing the border illegally.

The approach resulted in a spike in family separations yielding searing images of children held in cages at border facilities and audio recordings of young children crying for their parents. Outrage over the policy prompted Trump to reverse course and sign an executive order on June 20 that ended the practice of separating families while maintaining measures mandating criminal prosecution for adults stopped crossing the border illegally.

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Now families are kept together while they are in custody.

US Senator Elizabeth Warren addressed the crowd on City Hall Plaza from the back of a white pickup truck, telling demonstrators about her recent trip to the border town of McAllen, Texas, and calling for ICE to be replaced with an agency that “reflects our morality.”

While visiting the US-Mexico border, Warren said she saw people locked in cages and talked to mothers who had been separated from their children.

“President Trump seems to think the only way to have immigration rules is to rip parents from their families, to treat rape victims and refugees like terrorists, and to put children in cages,” Warren said. “This is ugly. It’s wrong and it’s not the way to run our country.”

US Senator Edward J. Markey, who also spoke at City Hall Plaza, said he plans to visit the southern border on Sunday and Monday. He said he’s bringing homemade cards created by children in Massachusetts to distribute among children in detention facilities.

Trump’s immigration policies are hateful and pass judgment based on people’s race, color, and country of origin, Markey said.

“We are standing up and saying that he will not take our country,” he said. “We’re going to fight to ensure that he does not have a deportation army to take innocent people out of the United States of America.”

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US Representative Joseph P. Kennedy III said children belong with their parents.

“When the greatest government on earth takes its frustration out on a 2-year-old little girl or an infant little boy we stand up and say, ‘Not on our watch,’” he said. “We will stand up and fight for our humanity and the humanity of our neighbor.”

The demonstration drew a small number of counterprotesters who gathered near the Government Center MBTA station and held a sign reading, “Family Separation Has Ended.”

The group of about six men wore dark clothes, hats, sunglasses, and masks. The organization Boston Free Speech posted a photograph of the counterprotesters on its Facebook page and identified the participants as members of its “street activism team.”

Boston Free Speech claims to promote open dialogue, but civil rights advocates say it is linked to people who espouse racial hatred and violence. The group staged a rally on Boston Common in August 2017 that was overwhelmed by throngs who spoke out against Nazis, racism, the Ku Klux Klan, and fascists.

At the immigration rally, some demonstrators surrounded the group, chanting “Nazis go home!” and “No hate! No fear! Nazis are not welcome here!”

The two groups were separated by police officers.

Steve Kropper, co-chairman of the Massachusetts Coalition for Immigration Reform, criticized the counterprotesters, saying most anti-immigration activists in the state are centrists who oppose separating immigrant families and reject Trump’s policies. His group advocates for reduced legal immigration and a strong law enforcement response to illegal immigration.

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Trump “is making a bad name for thoughtful participants in the immigration debate,” Kropper wrote in an e-mail.

Smaller demonstrations against family separation also brought protesters to separate gatherings at the New England Holocaust Memorial in Boston and the South Bay House of Correction.

More than 100 medical practitioners gathered near the Holocaust memorial to voice their support for keeping families together.

“I feel that although we need a strong immigration policy, it doesn’t need to be inhumane,” said Dr. Matthew Katz, a radiation oncologist at Lowell General Hospital. “To involuntarily tear children away from parents, often without explaining it to them first, is cruel and unusual.”

Some demonstrators wore their white medical coats.

“Part of my job is working with families, and the thought of ripping any kid from their parents is heartbreaking,” said Dr. Katie Brigham, a pediatrician at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Karla Rojas, 24, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, participated in a late-afternoon march to the South Bay House of Correction, which houses some immigration detainees.

“I came here as a child so I know how much it impacted me,” Rojas said. “We need to be united to make the change.”

Back on Boston Common, J.N. Burke wore an olive green dress with the words “I Really Do Care, Shouldn’t U?” painted on the back.

It’s her response, Burke said, to the Zara jacket Melania Trump wore on a trip to visit a shelter for migrant children in Texas that featured the words, “I really don’t care, do u?”

“A lot of people have been taking photos,” Burke said. “People should see it.”